Wireless powering efficiency of deep-body implantable devices
Icaro V. Soares, Mingxiang Gao, Zvonimir Sipus, Anja K. Skrivervik,, John S. Ho, and Denys Nikolayev

TL;DR
This paper introduces an anatomical model-based analysis of wireless power transfer efficiency for deep-body implants, revealing optimal frequencies, orientations, and design guidelines to enhance performance and safety.
Contribution
It presents a novel efficiency analysis approach using anatomical models, improving upon simplified models for better prediction of optimal operating conditions.
Findings
Maximum efficiency occurs at 1-5 GHz depending on depth.
Receiver orientation significantly impacts efficiency, up to 13-fold differences.
Buffered transmitters can be optimized for better power transfer.
Abstract
The wireless power transfer efficiency to implanted bioelectronic devices is constrained by several frequency-dependent physical mechanisms. Recent works have developed several mathematical formulations to understand these mechanisms and predict the optimal operating conditions. However, existing approaches rely on simplified body models, which are unable to capture important aspects of wireless power transfer. Therefore, this paper proposes the efficiency analysis approach in anatomical models that can provide insightful information on achieving the optimum operation conditions. First, this approach is validated with a theoretical spherical wave expansion analysis, and the results for a simplified spherical model and a human pectoral model are compared. The results show that although a magnetic receiver outperforms an electric one for near-field operation and both sources could be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWireless Power Transfer Systems · Energy Harvesting in Wireless Networks · Wireless Body Area Networks
